An interesting article was posted by the Seattle Times yesterday, it's at: http://www.seattletimes.com/topstories/browse/html97/inet_013097.html This was the Jan 30, 1997 issue. In it, Diedtra Henderson writes:
"US West serves 2.2 million customers in Washington state and spent >$340 million improving its phone system here last year, a spokesman said. >The company blames a meteoric rise in Internet use for its phone-service woes. [SNIP] "For the next five years we are in big trouble. There is no clear, intelligent way to expand the phone system to handle the Internet demands," said Lu, who expects metered Internet access in the future >- in other words, you pay by the hour. "
My question is: Have other people heard of similar attempts by the telephone companies to have "metered Internet access"? It seems >they would need a hardware level signal analyzer on their switching equipment to differentiate between voice/data. Does anyone know by what means >such a technology could be implemented? What would be the legal ramifications?
Also do people agree with the claims that our local lack of >available phone lines is due to Internet usage or just to lack of foresight in growth management decisions?
I think we're missing the point. They aren't just going to charge hourly for data service, but for all service. It really wasn't that long ago they were doing this (US West stopped in the late 70's or early 80's All they are going to need to do is notify customers and turn the old billing procedures back on, they already track hourly usage anyway.
Tony Torzillo ---------------------------------------------------------------- Network Specialist, UW Network Operations Center, 543-5128 EMAIL: ndc-noc@cac.washington.edu, torzillo@cac.washington.edu ----------------------------------------------------------------